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15 votes
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SAG begins granting waivers to indie productions but plenty of questions remain, not least whether actors will show up
11 votes -
In Hollywood, the strikes are just part of the problem
11 votes -
SAG-AFTRA officially calls strike as National Board approves guild’s first walkout against film & TV industry since 1980
99 votes -
‘Deadpool 3,’ ‘Mission: Impossible 8’ and ‘Venom 3’ halted amid actors strike
20 votes -
SAG-AFTRA strike imminent as talks conclude with no deal
17 votes -
Hollywood studios’ WGA strike endgame is to let writers go broke before resuming talks in fall
42 votes -
Hollywood CEOs and industry insiders seek Federal mediation to help avert SAG-AFTRA strike
29 votes -
‘Diversity fatigue’? Hollywood loses four DEI leaders in less than two weeks
33 votes -
OK but what do we really think about the Spider-Verse Vulture article?
A post for this exists. I checked, I searched for it first thing and skimmed through the comments. So this should be the end of it. I know you shouldn't make a duplicate post, lest make any kind...
I checked, I searched for it first thing and skimmed through the comments. So this should be the end of it. I know you shouldn't make a duplicate post, lest make any kind of post in a different group.
(if you don't know what I'm talking about, click the link at the top, open the article in incognito mode, read.)
As young folk say, idc. I feel this is beyond the scope of the original post as industry talk deserves serious, dedicated discourse. ~talk seems to be the place for this, anything here barely gets the same engagement like ~talk posts; they garner lots and lots... I mean, LOTS of comments. Plus, the WGA writer's strike is still goin on — they been doin this shit for 2 months with tedious media coverage, and have made their presence known. If they can do that, I think I can take a page from their book and post here.
This is not a retread on the Vulture article, not necessarily about your opinions on the work culture Phil Lord creates, etc. If you feel like this post is a duplicate: Don't vote, don't comment! Ignore this post! Revive the original post — you can do it as long as it's on-topic and thoughtful.
This post is about the ripple effects of what that article says, and how it may reflect industry-wide treatment of animators, and even adjacent subcultures and sectors. Take VFX, for instance: Lots of ppl seem to criticise Marvel Studios for their overuse of CGI in their productions, blissfully unaware that Marvel Studios is a bad client to work with.
In other words; this post is meant to discuss Phil Lords in the industry that cause over 100 animators to quit (which I think is too much to ignore). This post is a launching pad for industry awareness, and should hopefully give you the idea to protest in your own way. Don't believe skipping movies will work? It doooooeeeeeeessss~~
So.... what do we REALLY think about the Spider-Verse article on Vulture? What does this truly reveal about the broader treatment of animation in Hollywood? Does Sony raise good points? What are some other instances where a producer or executive caused such upset during the production of an animated movie? What are other reasons or work culture tidbits outside people or moviegoers don't know about? What's it like being an animator working in Hollywood?? What are some labour unions or orgs to look into? What are some novel solutions or fixes that should be pushed by everyone as much as possible?
I was gonna post this on ~talk, but decided last minute not to. If you have read this far (and think this is not a duplicate post), I implore you to vote a/o comment! If this gets to at least like... 40 or 50 comments, that would be so amazing. If not, oh well. But I think it would be a disservice since no matter how small or insignificant this post is, it will help. It may inspire someone here to do something out there, and I think that's more than enough reason.
7 votes -
Screen Actors Guild members start strike preparations a week ahead of extended talks deadline
17 votes -
Denmark is the latest European country to push for a levy on streamers' local turnover to fund local TV and film content
8 votes -
Golden Globes dissolves the Hollywood Foreign Press voting body
9 votes -
‘The Force has left Lucasfilm’: What has gone wrong for the studio behind ‘Star Wars’ and ‘Indiana Jones’—and how Disney’s Bob Iger can salvage his $4 billion investment
25 votes -
Sex, cyborgs and videotape: An introduction to Japanese V-cinema
5 votes -
Writers Guild calls first strike in fifteen years
23 votes -
Yep, it’s slow: How a potential strike and industry pivoting has Hollywood at a standstill
5 votes -
Disney could sell its 67% stake in Hulu to buy up more Marvel rights
4 votes -
Could mediocre movies save movie theaters? ‘Ticket to Paradise,’ ‘A Man Called Otto’ and ‘80 for Brady’ say yes
4 votes -
Netflix dropped ‘The Cloverfield Paradox’ after the Super Bowl five years ago – why streamers are unlikely to try that surprise strategy again
5 votes -
Netflix offloads two completed films, filmmakers shop projects elsewhere
6 votes -
Hollywood cannot survive without movie theaters. Why is this so hard for studios to believe?
5 votes -
Sundance readies big return as indie film business struggles to survive
3 votes -
Ana de Armas fans’ lawsuit puts studios at risk over deceptive trailers
10 votes -
Kim Masters on Hollywood’s year of wishful thinking
1 vote -
Former WarnerBros executive Jason Killar on the streaming wars and the future of media
@Jason Kilar: The @WSJ asked me to write about the streaming wars and the future of media. Here is the essay + a Twitter thread which covers a few of the main points. https://t.co/BzRQIEAZMY via @WSJ
5 votes -
Chinese protesters want ‘cinema freedom.’ Hollywood should help them.
3 votes -
British Film Commission and the Norwegian Film Commission have signed a memorandum of understanding to boost filming collaboration
5 votes -
Nice guys (and gals) finish first? How likability and popularity help Oscar contenders
2 votes -
Marvel, DC among last bastion for supersized paydays
3 votes -
Brendan Fraser on his "comeback" in 'The Whale' and defying Hollywood's obesity prejudices
3 votes -
‘Amsterdam’ stands to lose nearly $100 million: What this means for upscale movies
5 votes -
Hollywood says farewell to Chinese investment bonanza
9 votes -
Moral clauses: Why a red scare tactic revived in the #MeToo era could lead to a fight with the guilds
3 votes -
The visual effects crisis
4 votes -
High anxiety in Hollywood: “Everyone is totally drained and burnt out”
8 votes -
Bryce Dallas Howard: I was told to lose weight for ‘Jurassic World’ films
7 votes -
Inside the documentary cash grab
8 votes -
Film productions from around the world are eager to capture Iceland's dramatic landscapes – and to take advantage of an attractive incentive scheme
3 votes -
HBO Max and Warner Bros. Discovery seem to be on fire, and that's on purpose. The plan is to make a lot of money as cheaply as possible.
7 votes -
Former Disney CEO Bob Iger battled the company's board over succession, insiders say, and was unhappy about the transition of power to Bob Chapek
7 votes -
The golden age of the aging actor
7 votes -
Hollywood execs brace for advertising “storm clouds” ahead
5 votes -
Bob Chapek’s empire of insecurity
3 votes -
Tom Cruise’s new ‘Top Gun’ could take movies back to the late ’70s and the golden age of blockbusters
12 votes -
How the US market crash is forcing Hollywood giants to reassess digital strategies
9 votes -
Massive film marketing spends are back as summer tentpole season kicks off
2 votes -
MGM’s Amazon era begins with big, unanswered questions
5 votes -
Disney, Sony and Warner Bros pause film releases in Russia over Ukraine invasion
9 votes -
Roland Emmerich: Marvel and Star Wars are ‘ruining our industry’
13 votes